THE IMPORTANCE OF MANAGING B3 LESIONS: A CASE REPORT

Authors

  • Carlos Ricardo Chagas Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro – Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brazil.
  • Natascha Carneiro Chagas Universidade Iguaçu – Nova Iguaçu (RJ), Brazil.
  • Nathália Alves Silva Universidade Iguaçu – Nova Iguaçu (RJ), Brazil.
  • Gabriela Del Prete Magalhães Universidade Iguaçu – Nova Iguaçu (RJ), Brazil.
  • Sálua Saud Bedran Universidade Iguaçu – Nova Iguaçu (RJ), Brazil.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29289/259453942022V32S2093

Keywords:

Breast cancer, Breast carcinoma, Ductal atypical hyperplasia

Abstract

The lesions of uncertain malignant potential of the breast, classified as B3, besides increasing the relative risk for breast
cancer, have very heterogeneous abnormalities and raise a big question when defining conduct. A good multidisciplinary
evaluation is necessary, comparing biopsy and imaging test results. This study reports the case of a 54-year-old patient,
without other risk factors for breast cancer, who was referred to MAMARJ, a mastology clinic, from a gynecology service,
in November 2019 for evaluation of category 4 mammography, due to alterations in the right breast: linear and heterogeneous calcifications in the upper outer quadrant (UOQ) and punctiform and grouped calcifications in the lower inner quadrant (LIQ). Mammotomies were indicated, and histopathological reports were compatible with columnar cell hyperplasia
with a focus on planar atypia — in the UOQ — and adenomyoepithelioma and columnar cell hyperplasia without atypia in
the LIQ. She was taken to surgery to remove the lesion from the UOQ (histopathology without malignancy). In July 2020,
she underwent mammography with a category 2 (BIRADS) report due to parenchymal distortion from previous surgery,
and ultrasonography with sparse cysts and bilateral ductal ectasia (category 3). One year later, in July 2021, she presented
mammography — amorphous calcifications in the upper quadrants and punctate calcifications in the LIQ, near the clip
from the previous mammotomy. Mammotomy of the calcifications in the upper quadrants was performed. The diagnosis of the vacuum-guided biopsy was columnar cell changes with minimal architectural atypia in the upper quadrants.
Removal of the lesion from the upper quadrants and the LIQ (target of the previous mammotomy) was indicated. The histopathological diagnosis was ductal carcinoma in situ (LIQ), associated with atypical ductal hyperplasia, microcalcifications, and flat epithelial atypia. Immunohistochemical panels include estrogen receptor positive, progesterone receptor
positive, and human epidermal growth factor receptor-type 2 negative. The upper quadrant lesion was compatible with a
focus of intraductal proliferation with discrete atypia. A simple mastectomy was performed with immediate reconstruction of the right breast. Mastectomy was indicated mainly because it was the patient’s choice. As suggested, since the first
diagnosis of B3 lesion and after that of ductal carcinoma in situ, the patient did not accept chemoprevention. It should be
noted that risk-reducing mastectomy is cited only rarely for prevention in cases of recurrent and multicentric premalignant lesions, as in this case.

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Published

2026-04-01

How to Cite

Chagas, C. R., Chagas, N. C., Silva, N. A., Magalhães, G. D. P., & Bedran, S. S. (2026). THE IMPORTANCE OF MANAGING B3 LESIONS: A CASE REPORT. Mastology, 32(suppl.2). https://doi.org/10.29289/259453942022V32S2093

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